Monday, January 21, 2013

US
Supreme Court Genocidal Law Confronted by Major Pro-Life Decision of Alabama
Supreme Court

By Julio
Severo

The Alabama
Supreme Court ruled last week that a law that protects people from chemical endangerment
is also applicable to unborn babies. The state court decision showed that unborn
babies are endowed with personhood and they deserve respect.

Such a decision,
which is having repercussions in America and provoking the wrath from the Left,
collides with the US Supreme Court, which legalized abortion in the infamous Roe
vs. Wade in 1973.

The Alabama case,
which is casting doubts on the legitimacy on the federal protection of
abortion, involved a woman that smoked meth three days before her baby was born,
who lived for only a few minutes. The autopsy showed that the baby died from
methamphetamine exposure.

In her defense, her
lawyers argued that if it is not a crime to abort a baby, it is not crime to
expose him to dangerous drugs.

According to the
abortion law that is in force for forty years, if the drug-user mother availed
herself of the murderous services of an abortion clinic, she would face no
legal problems, because in America abortion is allowed in every month of
pregnancy, even on the day of childbirth.

The major
decision of the Alabama court against the woman that killed her son outside abortion
hospitals and clinics may give a light of hope in a nation that for years championed
world Protestantism, but today boasts of championing the “abortion gospel” in
the UN and throughout world.

After legalization
on January 22, 1973, 55 million American babies were murdered, for all conceivable
reasons and even without a reason. It is by far the largest act of genocide
committed in American soil.

More than three
thousand children are murdered a day, and the pro-abortion president does not offer
a single sigh of condolence for the victims of an American government more and
more obsessed with playing the role of a world ambassador of the culture of
death.

America is today
a society accustomed to the genocide of the innocent. The massive salvage
slaughter of unborn babies is equated with nothing more than the extraction of
a decayed tooth.

This year, pro-abortion
groups will celebrate 40 years of legal abortion in America. It is the most
macabre birthday in all the American history.

The attitude of
the Alabama court of restoring the dignity of personhood to unborn babies dying
of drug exposure may be a first important step in confronting the Supreme Court
with its shameful genocidal law.

The only way of
stopping that insanity is for the US Supreme Court to see what the Alabama court
saw: If it is a crime to expose any citizen, inside or outside the uterus, to dangerous
drugs, it should be a crime to kill not only people outside the uterus, but
also inside it.

If such understanding
spreads and prevails, the insane American law should be revoked, the shedding
of innocent blood should stop and Americans should repent and mourn the fact
that for decades they have allowed, approved and consented the genocide of the
innocent.

The Alabama Supreme
Court has taken an important step against the federal abortion giant.

Let us pray that
God may transform that small step in a mortal blow in the giant.

Let us pray for
the Alabama Supreme Court, especially Justice Tom Parker, and its fight of pro-life
David against the pro-abortion Goliath, the US Supreme Court.